How to install Windows XP on a formatted Portege 2010

Hello, I've got my friends Toshiba Portege 2010 Notebook. It's got no internal floppy or CD drive. The harddrive has been formatted with DOS and there is no Product Recovery Disc. So there's nothing on the notebook except for the BIOS. I've got an external floppy drive that can be used. I also have an external USB CD drive, but the notebook doesn't find it. I managed to copy command.com and some USB drivers on the harddrive with the floppy drive and a Windows boot disc. But the CD drive is not recognized.
We thought about copying the Windows setup files on the harddrive via LAN. The router is able to recognize the notebook, but we can't access it from the other PC...
Has anyone had similar experiemces with Portege notebooks... Can anyone help please?

> Has anyone had similar experiences with Portege Notebooks?
Yes of course and its a simply solution. You need a compatible external pcmcia-card drive if you want to boot from CD!
If you want to you the LAN as a booting source you will need to install the RIS server on a second PC. Then you could be able to boot from LAN.
Another hint use the advanced search option of this forum and you will get several threads about installation of OS on Portg notebooks

Similar Messages

  • How to install Windows 7/Vista as 2nd OS and retain predesktop environment (service partition)

    This is a step-by-step instruction how to install Windows Vista or Windows 7 as a second OS on a Lenovo Thinkpad that originally shipped with Windows XP AND how to retain the access to the Lenovo Service Partition.
    I have been searching the internet for instructions like these but could not find anything useful. So I am posting it
    here. Maybe this helps other users.
    I have tested the procedure below with installation of Windows Vista Ultimate (64bit) and Windows 7 Ultimate (64bit). I believe that the procedure will also work with the 32bit versions of these OSs. I am not totally convinced that this works when the OS to install is Windows XP (64bit or 32bit). XP has a completely different boot sequence compared to Vista or 7. The basic steps would remain the same, but the XP setup is less forgiving when it finds an unknown partition. If somebody wants to try it out, please post your results as a reply to this forum entry.
    Never never never try to install an older OS (like Windows 2000 or NT) as a second OS when XP is already installed! This is doomed to fail.
    The procedure below does NOT work for Linux installations. I am not a Linux wizard, but any Linux bootmanager I know about is incompatible with the Lenovo Service Partition.
    The procedure was tested on a Thinkpad R61 model 8918-B9G. It should work similar on other models.
    You definitely need a service partition with Rescue&Recovery version 4. It will NOT work with older versions of R&R or if the service partition is not a type12 partition (see below how to find out about that).
    I assume that the harddisk partitions are unmodified, i.e. still have factory settings. This is likely the case if you
    never attempted any OS install or recovery action. If this is not the case, the procedure may or may not work.
    You also need a bootable CD with a tool that can change the size of your current system partition. I was using gparted live version 0.5.2-9. ( http://gparted.sourceforge.net/ )
    Everything you do is at your own risk. I am in no way related to Lenovo, other than being a customer using their
    products.
    Step 1) Make a full backup of your harddisk. Get yourself recovery CDs for your Thinkpad model if you don't have any. The changes we are about to make can completely screw up your harddrive. A typo is sufficient for that to happen.
    Step 2) Power on the system. Check that you can boot into the Service Partition by pressing the Thinkvantage button when the startup screen appears. (Older systems may have a differently named button.) If there is a problem booting the service partition now, it is likely that the rest of this procedure will not fix it.
    Step 3) From the service partition choose 'Warmstart' to reboot the system. Reboot Windows XP, logon.
    Open a command prompt. CD to the following directory:
    \Program Files\Common Files\Lenovo\BMGR
    On a german language system (like mine) it is
    \Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR
    If you have an older IBM system the directory may be named
    \Program Files\Common Files\IBM\BMGR
    or something like that. Maybe you need to search around.
    In the following, I will call this the "BMGR dir".
    Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    You should get an output similar to this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    It's a Lenovo  MBR
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Using version 2.05 of Lenovo Boot Manager
    Reading: \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE0
            MBR Sector 1 Index: 1   Checksum: 00    Disabled
            MBR Sector 2 Index: 4   Checksum: 03    Passed
            MBR Sector 3 Index: 5   Checksum: FD    Passed
            MBR Sector 4 Index: 6   Checksum: 58    Passed
            MBR Sector 5 Index: 7   Checksum: 96    Passed
            MBR Sector 6 Index: 8   Checksum: 7F    Passed
            Data Sector  Index: 3   Checksum: F1    Passed
            Original MBR Index: 2   Checksum: BD    Passed
            No Patch Sectors
            Checksum Byte: 00
            Think Flag: 1
            WinPE Partition (0-3): 1        Alt Boot Partition (0-3): 1
            Boot Config: 2 (Service Partition containing two Service OS's)
            Boot State: 0                   Alt Boot Flag: 0
            (Normal booting operation, will boot to Customer OS)
            RRU: 00000000 00000000          Prev Active Part: 255
            Previous Partition Type: FF     Patch IN: 0     OUT: 0
            CIRT Disabled
            TOC: 0000000000000000           Lock: 0
            Show Error: 0                   Halt on Error: 0
            CIRT Load Return: 0
            CIRT Execute Return: 0
            Pause Duration: 10              Scan Code: 0085
            F11 Msg: To boot to the Rescue and Recovery Environment, Press F11
            Check Msg: There has been a signature failure
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   239 255 255           63    301296177
     1   0x00   0x12      0 193 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     2   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    The important thing to look for is the 0x12 partition type in the partition table at the bottom. This is the service
    partition. If you do not have a 0x12 partition, then you can stop here because the rest of the procedure will not work
    for you.
    Step 4) Shutdown and boot gparted from CD. Shrink the system partition to the desired size. Do NOT touch the service partition! Do NOT attempt to create another partition! Leave the new white space on the disk untouched! Apply changes and restart the system.
    Step 5) Reboot XP. gparted has set the NTFS dirty bit. This will cause XP to run a full CHKDSK. Depending on how much files there are on the partition this may take considerable time. Let CHKDSK run to completion. When CHKDSK finishes, the system will automatically reboot.
    Step 6) XP reboots now. Logon. When loading the desktop, XP will show a popup window, stating that system settings have been changed and new devices been discovered and that the system should be rebooted. This is ok. XP actually recognized the shrunk system partition and applied the necessary changes to its own system parameters. Click YES to reboot the system.
    Step 7) XP reboots. Logon. Open a command prompt, CD to the BMGR dir and enter:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output you get should be similar to the output you have seen in step 3, except that the partition 0 size column
    shows a smaller value.
    Step 8) Shutdown, restart. Check that you can still access the service partition by pressing the blue Thinkvantage button when the system startup screen appears.
    Step 9) From the predesktop environment choose warmstart. Reboot XP. Logon, logoff, shutdown.
    DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP!!! If you start the Windows Vista/7 install right after shutting down from the predesktop
    environment, the Win Vista/7 setup program will screw up your harddisk! The Lenovo MBR bootmgr reboot takes two steps for completion. The first step is the shutdown and the second step is executed when booting from harddisk. A boot from the Windows CD will skip this second step and disaster finds its way...
    Step 10) Insert the Windows Vista/7 DVD and boot it. Start the setup. Choose "Custom (advanced)" install. It will show the partitions on the disk. Select the white space (unallocated). Click on "disk options (advanced)". Click on "New" to create a new partition in the white space. Keep the default size, click "Apply". Click "Format". A popup window appears stating that the partition may hold OEM data. Continue. Click "Next". Installation starts.
    Continued in the second post...

    Step 11) Win Vista/XP will reboot several times during installation. You will always see the Windows bootmanager with an entry for "Earlier Windows version" and "Windows Vista/7". DO NOT DARE to touch the blue Thinkvantage button on any reboot or press any function keys!
    Step 12) When the installation is finished, check that you can successfully reboot Win Vista/7 by selecting it from the Windows bootmanager.
    Step 13) Reboot XP by choosing "Earlier Windows version" from the Windows bootmanager. Open a command prompt. CD to the BMGR dir. Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output will now look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   254 255 255           63    109675692
     1   0x00   0x07    239 255 255   239 255 255    109676544    191619072
     2   0x00   0x12    239 255 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    startLBA and size will of course differ, depending on the actual partition sizes you have set. Note that Windows setup moved the service partition to entry 2 of the partition table. If you do not see the 0x12 partition then stop here.
    Otherwise the following step will likely screw up you harddisk.
    Enter the following command (case sensitive?):
    bmgr32 /Fbootmgr.bin /m0 /IBM /v
    The output will look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /Fbootmgr.bin /m0 /IBM /v
    installing MBR
    finding free sectors
    Sector 9 is free
    Sector 10 is free
    Sector 11 is free
    Sector 12 is free
    Sector 13 is free
    Sector 14 is free
    Sector 15 is free
    Sector 16 is free
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Setting Think bit
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    This command reinstalled the Lenovo bootmanager in the MBR that was erased by the Win Vista/7 setup program.
    Enter the following command:
    bmgr32 /info /v
    The output will now look like this:
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>bmgr32 /info /v
    It's a Lenovo  MBR
    Opened Master Boot Record to see whose MBR it is.
    It's a Lenovo MBR
    Opened drive for reading
    Partition 0 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 1 the SP? no, type 0x07 is not correct
    Partition 2 the SP? (512)  Label is SERVICEV
    Using version 2.05 of Lenovo Boot Manager
    Reading: \\.\PHYSICALDRIVE0
            MBR Sector 1 Index: 1   Checksum: 00    Disabled
            MBR Sector 2 Index: 11  Checksum: 03    Passed
            MBR Sector 3 Index: 12  Checksum: FD    Passed
            MBR Sector 4 Index: 13  Checksum: 58    Passed
            MBR Sector 5 Index: 14  Checksum: 96    Passed
            MBR Sector 6 Index: 15  Checksum: 7F    Passed
            Data Sector  Index: 10  Checksum: 01    Passed
            Original MBR Index: 9   Checksum: 12    Passed
            No Patch Sectors
            Checksum Byte: 00
            Think Flag: 1
            WinPE Partition (0-3): 2        Alt Boot Partition (0-3): 2
            Boot Config: 0 (Service Partition containing one Service OS)
            Boot State: 0                   Alt Boot Flag: 0
            (Normal booting operation, will boot to Customer OS)
            RRU: 00000000 00000000          Prev Active Part: 255
            Previous Partition Type: FF     Patch IN: 0     OUT: 0
            CIRT Disabled
            TOC: 0000000000000000           Lock: 0
            Show Error: 0                   Halt on Error: 0
            CIRT Load Return: 0
            CIRT Execute Return: 0
            Pause Duration: 10              Scan Code: 0085
            F11 Msg: To boot to the Rescue and Recovery Environment, Press F11
            Check Msg: There has been a signature failure
     #  active  type      start CHS      end CHS      startLBA       size
     0   0x80   0x07      1   1   0   254 255 255           63    109675692
     1   0x00   0x07    239 255 255   239 255 255    109676544    191619072
     2   0x00   0x12    239 255 255   239 255 255    301296240     11279520
     3   0x00   0x00      0   0   0     0   0   0            0            0
    C:\Programme\Gemeinsame Dateien\Lenovo\BMGR>
    So you have actually regained the Lenovo bootmanager. But you are not done yet.
    Step 14) Shutdown. Restart the system. DO NOT PRESS THE BLUE THINKVANTAGE BUTTON AT THE SYSTEM STARTUP SCREEN!!! IT DOES NOT WORK YET! When the system startup screen DISAPPEARS, quickly press F11 (maybe several times). The system should now boot the predesktop environment from the service partition.
    Step 15) When the predesktop is there, choose "warmstart". When the system startup screen appears, press the blue Thinkvantage button. The system should again boot into the predesktop. The blue Thinkvantage button now works permanently.
    Step 16) Check that you can boot Win XP and Win Vista/7 from the Windows bootmanager. You're done!

  • How to install Windows on MAC? (Can't see the check box "Install or remove Windows 7 or later version" on Boot Camp Assistant)

    I want to install Windows 7 on my MBP mid 2012 but in Boot Camp does not appear the check box: "Install or remove Windows 7 or later version". I continued with making the USB bootable with Windows 7 but then when I restart and boot with the USB I still can't install Windows because then I receive an error: ""Windows cannot be installed on this disk. The selected disk is of GPT partition style."  
    From OS with Boot Camp I didn't manage to make a partition for Windows instead I made one with Disk Utility (formated FAT).
    After booting from USB that partition was also formated into NTFS necessary for Windows. Still the same error.
    Any idea how to install Windows on my MAC?

    My Windows copy is a X64.
    MBP mid 2012 with Mountain Lion 10.8.3.
    Model Identifier:          MacBookPro9,2
      Processor Name:          Intel Core i5
      Processor Speed:          2.5 GHz
      Number of Processors:          1
      Total Number of Cores:          2
      L2 Cache (per Core):          256 KB
      L3 Cache:          3 MB
      Memory:          4 GB
      Boot ROM Version:          MBP91.00D3.B08
      SMC Version (system):          2.2f41
    Should have:
    MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2012)
    MacBookPro9,2
    MBP91.00D3.B08 (EFI 2.9)
    If you are refering to this I tried to update the EFI version (I see only SMC version 2.9 as a diferrence of what I have)  but on installing I received an error: "This software is not supported on your system."

  • How to install Windows on a SATA boot drive

    Here is how to install Windows XP on a SATA boot drive.  This procedure was first developed by syar2003 and has been used by many iusers ncluding myself.   Although it was originally developed for Neo2 mb's and Windows XP Pro, it has general applicability to systems as well.
    1.  Have only the SATA drive you want to be the boot drive active in your system.  Disconnect the power to all other HDD's if any.
    2.  Have only one optical drive active. Disconnect the power to the other opticals if any. (Best to have a burner optical as master on IDE1.)
    3.  Plug SATA drive into SATA 1 on the mb.  (it may show us as an IDE drive somewhere down the list in BIOS.  That's okl)
    4.  Enable appropriate SATA options in BIOS.  Set boot order to floppy, cd, SATA drive.  Set boot priority to SATA drive.
    5.  Partition and format the SATA HDD using the utilites CD that came with the SATA drive.  (If you don't have an HDD utilities disk, download one from the website of your HDD manufacturer.)
    6.  Run Windows  setup.  No need to load drivers at the F6 promt unless you are planning to do a RAID configuration.
    7.  Windows XP should install without incident.
    8.  After you are up and running, plug the power back into your other HDD and optical drives if any.
    If you have a board older than the K8 series, it may be necessary to load the SATA drivers at the F6 prompt.  If the above procedure does not work, than try it again loading the SATA drivers.
    If this procedure does not work for you, it is likely that your particular SATA HDD has some compatablity problem with Windows setup and/or your motherboard.  The solution to this is to try another SATA drive.  In general, most failures using this procedure have been traced to certain WD, Seagate and Hitachi SATA drivers of smaller capacities.  Fewer problems seem to have occured with Maxtor HDD's.

    Kaplan, from an earlier post of mine regarding sata2 hdds - I have them plugged into the sata1&2 ports, installed the nvidia raid first and then installed winxp (in both raid 0 and raid 1).  My bios is 3.1 and its a known problem that bios 3.3 & 3.4 have nvidia raid problems but seems to be fixed in the beta bios 3.53:
    I just purchased 2 hitachi deskstar sata2 80gb hdds ($60 each at zzf) and the interesting thing about them is that you have to "enable" sata2.  I have been testing the performance of sata1, sata2, raid1 and raid0 and the results are below.   
    The drives themselves are factory default set at sata1. Since I purchased OEM, no software or instructions were included.  I had to go to the hitachi website download section to download a dos based program (the features program) to enable sata2.  After enabling the hdds to sata2, they were recognized in winxp in the nforce ADMA controller device driver and the screen reads with the primary channel as Serial ATA Generation 2 - 3G...and all 4 boxes below it are checked (the boxes enable bios select xfer mode, enable read caching, enable write caching and enable command queuing are checked).  An interesting thing about the sata2 spec is that all sata2 hdds must come standard with NCQ...its not advertised on these 80 gb hdds on the hitachi website (unlike the larger hitachi sata2 hdds) but its a standard sata2 spec and these 80gb hitachi hdds are recoginized in winxp as sata2.
    The other interesting feature about the hitachi sata2 hdds is setting them up to operate in an adjustable "performance" to "silence" mode.  The hdds are default set at high perfromance but you can manually lower the performance to increase the silence of the hdds which is fully adjustable to your liking.  I tested the highest silence/lowest performance setting and you cannot hear the hard drive at all. 
    Testing - I tested the 2 hitachi sata2 deskstars with the first result in sata1 mode, the second in sata2 mode, the third in raid1 mode and the fourth in raid0 mode.
    First, a significant increase in raid0 over sata1, sata2 and raid1 with sequential reads and writes (PC Wizard).
    Write: 28mb/s vs 29mb/s vs 27mb/s vs 53mb/s
    Read: 45mb/s vs 46mb/s vs 43mb/s vs 83mb/s
    Second, significant increase in sata 2, raid 1 & raid 0 over sata1 with buffered reads and writes (PC Wizard).
    Write: 104mb/s vs 176mb/s vs 165mb/s vs 266mb/s
    Read: 123mb/s vs 200mb/s vs 200mb/s vs 293mb/s
    Third, significant increase in sata 2, raid 1 & raid 0 over sata1 with burst reads (HD Tach).
    Burst Read: 133mb/s vs 225mb/s vs 219mb/s vs 334 mb/s
    It is interesting to note that raid1 is better than sata1 but marginally slower in all tests over sata2.  Raid0 is significantly faster on all tests.   

  • How to install Windows 7 from a USB drive!

    This is even easier than installing Windows XP from a USB drive, and will also reduce the time taken to install Windows 7, it took me about 15 minutes!
    The advice in the guide is also applicable to installing Vista.
    You need basically:
    a USB flash drive at least 4GB in size
    a Windows 7 DVD
    To sum up:
    Format your USB drive, with the NTFS filesystem
    Open Command Prompt as an administrator, and run the Bootsect.exe program off the Windows 7 CD to make the USB drive bootable
    Copy the contents of the Windows 7 DVD to the USB drive
    Restart your PC, press F11 (or whichever key it is) to access the Boot menu, and select your USB drive to boot from
    Full guide here:
    http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-install-windows-7vista-from-usb-drive-detailed-100-working-guide/

    Quote from: bnborg on 16-February-11, 10:28:04
    I have done this and it is simple.
    I cleaned and (re)formated an 8GB flash drive under Windows7 using diskpart.  I chose quick format and a fat filesystem.  It doesn't need to be ntfs.  I had diskpart mark the partition active.  I copied the DVD contents to the flash drive.  I also made a folder on it for motherboard drivers.
    After that, I booted the drive on a new machine.  Windows7 setup came up, and didn't find any hard drives, other than the USB flash drive.  I clicked the button to load drivers, and pointed it to the folder I had copied them to on the flash.  Windows installed without problems.
    Hi bnborg..Do u mind sharing with me your motherboard driver folder? I have the MSI U135DX Netbook and each time I hit the button to install Windows 7 it asks me for some mobo driver...Think i might need it to get tru with a successful install..

  • How to Install Windows 7 Without the Disc

    1a)  Here is very useful article from PCWorld.com. The article is entitled "How to Install Windows 7 Without the Disc" and means just what it says. The article also has links to Magical Jelly Bean Keyfinder and legitimate Windows 7 ISOs from Digital River, a licensed distributor of Microsoft software. The article lists "Step 1" as;
    "Find your Windows 7 product key: Typically this 25-character alphanumeric string is printed on a sticker affixed to your PC or on documentation included with your PC. Alternatively, you can use a keyfinder program such as Magical Jelly Bean Keyfinder to pull your product key from the Registry. You need your product key to reinstall Windows."
    1b)  Using a key finder, however, is only useful if the Windows 7 product key was printed on a sticker (Microsoft Certificate of Authenticity) affixed to your PC, on documentation included with your PC, or sent via email by Microsoft. Assuming your computer came from one of the big brand computer manufacturers... HP, Sony, Dell, Gateway, etc... as most do, it uses a generic "mass activation" OEM SLP key. Trying to use this key by itself isn't going to work. This OEM SLP key needs to be mated with an OEM SLP certificate and an appropriate OEM BIOS with a proper SLIC table.
    1c)  Here is where ABR Beta With Windows 7 Support comes to the rescue. Follow the "How to use it" section of ABR for Windows Vista for information and instructions on how to use ABR. The steps listed for Vista apply to Windows 7 as well. Perform the "activation backup" to "backup" and save the OEM SLP key and OEM SLP certificate. Save the entire ABR folder to an external location for later use. This will allow you to pre-activate your "clean" Windows 7 install on the computer you pulled the key and certificate from.
    1d)  Now install Windows 7 from your new "Windows 7" disc or USB stick, following all prompts as needed. Don't enter a Windows 7 product key if request. Also, don't allow Windows to try to auto-activate. Once Windows is fully installed, run ABR "activation restore" to "restore" the previously backed up product key and certificate to the new Windows 7 install. Verify that Windows is activated, repeat "activation restore" if needed.
    2)  Here is another useful article, this time from SevenForums.com. This arcticle is entitled "Clean Reinstall - Factory OEM Windows 7" and provides detailed steps required to backup your computer, audit current hardware and software, locate software and drivers, install and activate Windows 7, and create a Windows 7 Backup Image of your fresh install.
    Good luck.
    Links to additional Windows 7 SP1 "Editions" and "Languages" can be found HERE and HERE.
    Link to "ei.cfg Removal Utility". The "ei.cfg Removal Utility" is a simple tool that will remove the ei.cfg  from any Windows ISO disc image, thereby converting the image into a "universal disc" that will prompt the user to select an edition during setup instead of being forced to use different discs for different versions of Windows 7.
    Direct link to Windows 7 USB/DVD Download tool.
    <Cross posted to Notebook Operating Systems and Software for Notebook, Laptop, and Netbook users>
    EDITED by Frank on 8/28/2013
    Please click the white KUDOS star to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

    ervis,
    Before formatting the hard drive you should have been able to use the HP Recovery Manager to create your recovery discs or perform a system recovery. This is provided the recovery partition wasn't already corrupt or damaged. If the "D:" HP Recovery partition is missing or damaged and you don't have a set of HP Recovery Discs, you will need to use the information in my previous post to get your computer up and running again.
    The information in the document referred you to applies to several different "types" of installations;
    Using ABRbeta is only needed if you have an active OEM factory SLP (system locked preactivated) installation of Windows. You use ABR to pull the factory key and certificate off the computer, to reuse it on the same computer with a clean Windows install.
    If you are just installing Windows and are going to use the Windows 7 product key on the COA on the side of your computer, all you need to do is download the same version of Windows that your key is for and burn the ISO. Now install Windows answering or following all prompts as needed (except do not enter the Windows product at this time... it will be entered later). Once Windows has completely installed, enter the key and activate it. Your Windows 7 OA key should work on a SP1 install without issue.
    The only thing I see that could mess things up, is the language of the install. If you are still having trouble activating Windows, please reference the ISO you download and a post a photo of your Windows COA
    with the key erased or Xed out.
    Please send KUDOs
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • How to Install Windows 7 on an HP Pavilion g6 g6 -2200ee

     Hi, sir, i bought a new HP Note Book Yesterday it as Loaded with Win-8 OS and i want to Change the OS to Win - 7, while i enter to the booting option .i cant see any bootdevice from CD/DVD Option . will you please help me to find a solution .. .. .. ..  Thanks & RegardsShan

    *****Disclaimer*****HP doesn't recommend the installation of Windows 7 on a computer shipped with Windows 8, nor will it support the installation of Windows 7. HP will not provide Windows 7 drivers and suitable drivers may not be available for the hardware in the computer. Also, Windows 7 may not support some of the hardware or software features designed for the computer. Make sure you create your HP Recovery Discs or USB Flash Recovery media before modifying or changing ANYTHING. You will need to DISABLE "Secure Boot" and maybe ENABLE "Legacy Support" in the "BIOS Secure Boot cofiguration" on the settings page shown below before you can attempt to install Windows 7;  or  Additionally, as the hard drive is partitioned as GPT, you must boot the computer using the "UEFI - CD/DVD drive" or "UEFI- USB Flash Drive" options in the "F9" boot menu. If something to that effect doesn't exist in the boot menu, please post a screen shot and/or describe the listed boot options. I suggest using Windows 7 SP1 for the best intallation experience. If you need Windows SP1, please see "How to Install Windows 7 Without the Disc" to download and create your own. If the DVD refuses to boot as UEFI, you may need to use a USB Flash drive (may require DISABLING "Fast Boot" in the BIOS) as the installation media. Please download the Windows 7 USB/DVD download tool to create a Windows 7 SP1 USB Flash drive. The USB Flash may not be recognized as a valid UEFI boot source by some computers if it is formated as NTFS and may require some modifications to work correctly. Here are the specs for your HP Pavilion g6-2200ee Notebook Computer. The HP Pavilion g6-2200ee Notebook PC Drivers page for your computer, appears to only have drivers for Windows 8 and 8.1.  Please post the Windows Device Manager's "Hardware Ids" for any additional missing or unknown devices, as shown in the example below;  If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask. Please click the white KUDOS star to show your appreciation

  • How to install Windows 8.1 Pro on Macbook Pro

    Hello everyone,
         I'm new to these forums and new to bootcamping as well but have been reading all kinds of posts about how to install Windows 8.1 on their Macs using bootcamp. I am however having trouble with this situation as I have no clue what to do next. I have a Macbook Pro 2011, running on Maverics, and I recently downloaded a digital copy of Windows 8.1 Pro, 64-bit, for the Mac platform, along with its CD key through my University's hub website as can be seen here.
    After finishing the downloading process, I received this file which is about 4GB large.
    When i double click on the file this happens. It opens something on DEVICES which gives me what is on the 2nd image.
    At this point, I'm at a loss on what to do next. Do i burn the file on a DVD hoping that Bootcamp will recognize it as a windows disc? Any help would be appreciated, thank you.

    You need a 'Full' Installer.
    From Boot Camp 5.1: Frequently asked questions - Apple Support
    Which versions of Windows work with Boot Camp 5.1?
    Boot Camp 5.1 supports 64-bit, non-Enterprise versions of Windows 7, Windows 8.0, and Windows 8.1. This version of Boot Camp doesn't support Windows XP, Windows Vista, or any 32-bit version of Windows. Depending on your Mac, you may be able to use an earlier version of Boot Camp to work with other versions of Windows. For details, see the Boot Camp system requirements for Microsoft Windows.
    Can I perform an upgrade install from a 32-bit version of Windows to a 64-bit version of Windows?
    It's not possible to upgrade a 32-bit version of Windows to a 64-bit version of Windows. Back up your important files, then perform a new install of the 64-bit version of Windows.

  • How to install windows 7 on my macbook pro mid 2009 using usb. right now aim using mavericks 10.9 can any one please help me. I tried to edit plist in boot camp but it went wrong please help me

    how to install windows 7 on my macbook pro mid 2009 using usb. right now iam using mavericks 10.9 can any one please help me. I tried to edit plist in boot camp but it went wrong please help me.
    Iam new to coding. please help me.

    try the solution posted by kunu here and report back
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/5105056?tstart=0

  • How to install Windows 7 on a MacBook Air?

    Hi everybody,
    I am sorry in case this has been covered before, but i couldnt find anything searching different categgories here, so i´d appreciate some help.
    I have got a late 2011 MacBook Air with lots of SSD and so on and i want to install windows 7.
    I bought a wndows 7 OEM DVD (actually, two discs, one says support software)
    I have tried to run bootcamp and follow the instructions, but to now end.
    on my macbook air, i get the option "create a windows 7 disc" or something like that (the first option), which doesnt help me because i dont have optical drive
    when i start boot camp on my iMac, this option will be greyed out.
    Also, I have tried to to ISO copys of the windows DVD and save them to a USB stick but i just wouldnt come to any result.
    does anybody have a good, comprehensive instruction on how to install windows 7 on an MBA withou optical drive?
    Also, is 30GB OK for Win 7 if you basically dont wanna do to much in windows (no office etc, just some small clients)
    thanks!

    30GB is not enough, especially on an SSD. Normally 50-60GB and with SSD I'd go with 80-90GB.
    http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp faq, how to, special instructions for Air
    There is a program to create DVD from ISO or .exe
    Apple Boot CAmp Assistant should have prompted to save a driver for you to support a USB-DVD, in addition to the normal Apple B.C. drivers you save to flash card.
    Disk Utility is not a good method for burning Windows DVDs.
    http://simplyburns.en.softonic.com/mac
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3241150

  • How to install windows 7 on Old Macbook Pro 15'inch 2.3 Core 2 Duo

    How to install windows 7 on Old Macbook Pro 15'inch 2.3 Core 2 Duo:
    I want to known how to install windows 7 on Old Macbook 15'inch 2.3 Core 2 Duo by using usb
    I try many time, but after restart bootcamp partition, apple show blinking folder error
    I think this firmware not support to install windows by usb
    NOTE:
    I Cannot install Apple New OSX Mountain Lion, Mavericks etc in this MAC
    If I cannot install windows 7 on this MAC, so tell me what I will do with this MAC  ? 

    I agree with the optical drive, mine acted strange, and i thought people were crazy and my drive was shot, but a simple cleaning disc worked miracles.
    But- are you trying to reboot with both the USB install and the DVD install both plugged in?  that would definitely cause confusion.
    Do this, reboot with NOTHING plugged in.  Once you hear the Mac chime, immediately press and hold option.
    You should only see the Mac HD, and Recovery Partition.
    THEN plug in your external DVD, and wait a min or two, you should see a disc icon appear next to the recovery partition that says something like windows.  If that doesnt appear after a min or two, unplug it and put the USB stick and do the same thing.  I had to do it this way on my mid 09 MBP.
    Let me know if this works to start the install.  If not we may have to start over with Bootcamp Assistant

  • I have Macbook Pro 13" mid 20012. How to install Windows 8 onto the mac using DVD? 10.8.3

    the title says it all.
    i have windows 8 DVD and i would like to have a clear instructions on how to install windows 8. I dont understand the need for USB

    Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
    You need a USB drive to install the Windows support software. It contains all the drivers that your MacBook Pro needs, and you will have to install them after finishing the Windows installation. If you don't install them, a lot of things won't work: the wireless card, the sound card, the brightness, the trackpad gestures... Apart from that, you don't need it for anything else.
    Apple has released the official steps to install Windows 8 on a Mac, so if you want, print this PDF > http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/boot_camp_install-setup_10.8.pdf

  • How to install Windows 8 on Macbook pro with retina display ?

    Hi - How to install Windows 8 on Macbook pro with retina display ?
    I am pretty new to the apple world. Tried doing it through bootcamp but did not success.
    I am not interested to install it through Parallels or Fusion. Plz guide.
    Thanks !

    OK, use Windows 8 in Bootcamp. Be aware that there are no Bootcamp drivers for Windows 8 yet. So you may experiance not only delays but display problems, freezing, crashes and other problems.
    Here is the Bootcamp forum. Make sure you read all the posts from people experiencing Windows 8 problems with Bootcamp. https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

  • How to install Windows 8 on Macbook Pro w/ Retina Display?

    Hi,
    I'm new to Macbook Pro w/ Retina Display. I'm a non-tech guy. Well, I'm familiar with Windows PCs but not familiar with Macbook Pros and OS X.
    Please if you people can step me step by step that how to Install Windows 8 on Macbook Pro w/ Retina Display 15 inch.
    Because recently, Apple released OS X Update 10.8.3 which includes support for Windows 8 in Boot Camp.
    I will be very thankful. Please help!
    Thanks

    Hi Mende1,
    Thanks for the fastest reply. Well, As I said I'm non tech noob on Macbook Pro.
    Well, The Guide is simple but there are few questions which I'm not able to understop still.
    1. How to get the copy of Windows 8? I have bought Windows 8 Ultimate and I have Genuine Key with me but I don't have files.
    2. Secondly, I have Bluetooth Apple Wireless Keyboard and Magic Mouse, Is this compatible with Windows 8?
    Thanks

  • How to install Windows 8.1 without optical drive

    I just got a ZBook 14 which was preinstalled with Windows 7. I want to use Windows 8.1 Pro which was alsp delivered on DVDs in the packages. However, this machine does not come with an optical drive. How can I install Windows 8.1 on this machine?
    Thanks

    Excuse me for being blunt but that is simply b***hit. Windows 8.1 comes delivered with the machine which is brand new and  any reasonably new PC is fully capable of running Windows 8.x. The question was just how I was supposed to load it onto the machine as it lacks an optical drive.  I suggest you do not give advice unless you know what you are talking about.
    For all others thatwant to the same thing.
    1. Make a copy of the Windows 8.1 DVD that comes shipped with the machine. See the following guide http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-install-windows-7vista-from-usb-drive-detailed-100-working-guide/
    2. Set Boot mode in BIOS to UEFI instead of legacy BIOS.
    3. Boot from the USB stick and install Windows 8.1, wipe all existing partitions. Please note that this will effectively remove any possibility to revert to Windows 7 by using the recovery partition but since Windows 7 DVDs are also delivered you can use the same procedure as above to install that. I guess that boot mode in this case should be set to legacy instead of UEFI.
    Of course, you do the above at your own risk but it has worked successfully for me. You could copy the content of the Application and Driver Recovert DVD for Windows 8.1 to a USB stick as well and install that afterwards.

Maybe you are looking for

  • How to remove NULL values from crosstab sheet in Viewer/Plus.

    I created a worksheet as crosstab. The sheet shows blanks in Desktop when there is no data in the cell, but the same sheet is showing NULL in Viewer. Is there any solution to make NULL as 0 or blank in Viewer? Thank you.

  • Help me! Itunes wont instal

    I tried downloading itunes10 and when i go to install it the itunes installer says "itunes installer completed - the installer encountered errors before itunes could be configured. your system has not been modified. to retry these operations at a lat

  • Inbound IDOC Verification

    Hi All, Iam doing File--Idoc Scenario( ORDERS 05) Where can i check if any error is present in WE05 Error is like Idoc not posted to Application Is there any specific place to check for correct error Regards Suman

  • Missing negative sign in SAPScript

    Hi, There is one quantity variable defined as type QUAN in the printing program, it is caculated with a result like 7.000-, however when debugged in the related SAPScript Form, the variable = 7.000, the negative sign is gone and the printing result i

  • YVM302 error, everything else working fine

    Hi there, my fairly new HUMAX YouView box started playing up last night, we had no Freeview tv channels for about an hour with error message YVM302 being displayed.  I rebooted twice, and it suddenly sprung back into life again.   Tonight, I have reb